Authors: Yelena Kopylova
swiftly about and just stopped himself from running by gripping the stanchion of the door, and as he leant against it for a moment the action pushed his hat on to one side and over one eye, and the detached part of his mind saw himself as a pantomime major, a drunken pantomime
major, for now he staggered somewhat as he walked
back into the yard.
Straightening his cap, he again looked about him, and
as his eyes came to rest on the back door a
strange fear assailed him as to what he might find
if he opened it, and he turned away from it and went
now into the barn. The bottom was swept almost clean,
a few implements only lay scattered around. He
raised his eyes to the upper platform. That too was
bare except for some broken bales of hay.
As if in a nightmare he was walking through the
alleyway, and now he was on the cinder path, at
least where it had been, for now a rough stone path led down to the cottage and the burn, the work of the German prisoners he supposed. He looked over the
hedge to the field where the hen crees stood.
The doors were swinging open, there was not a fowl to be seen. To the right lay the pigsties. No
echo of a grunt came from them.
He had to have support, so he leant back against
the wall of the byres and, his head drooping, he
looked down at his feet, and the slab of stone on which he was standing disappeared and he saw his feet were deep in the cinders, and there coming along the path, was a
red-headed youth, and when he stopped he grinned at
him and said, "You never thought you'd get a pip on your own, now did you, "cos as I said you're a born
loser. You lost the lass you loved, you married a
whore, you even lost yourself and your bloody platoon;
and now you've lost your farm. I always said you were a loser, didn't I? You've only got one more thing
to lose and when that bit of shrapnel moves ..."
He was brought from the wall as if he had been
shot. His hand flashed from his side where his holster used to lie, and now it was pointing at eye level straight
in front of him. He twisted round as if a hand had
spun him. His mouth was wide open, he was gasping for
air, his eyes were closed.
"Stop it!"
"Pull up!"
He was leaning against the wall again but bent over now and about to vomit.
He stood like this for some minutes before
straightening up, then, after wiping his mouth he went through the alleyway again and into the yard and walked towards the kitchen door. He put his hand on the knob and
pushed but it didn't give way. Angrily now,
he thrust his body against it but without effect; the door was firmly bolted on the inside. He knew that it
had strong bolts but he didn't remember them ever
having been used in his time.
He went to the kitchen window and peered in. His
hands to each side of his face, he gazed in
amazement at the bareness of it. Even the long white
wooden table was no longer there.
Like someone indeed drunk, he now made his way
to the front of the house, and it was the sitting-room
window he first looked through. The room was as bare as it had been when it was first constructed.
He was standing now gripping the knob of the front
door. He didn't expect the door to be
unlocked and it wasn't. Again he was leaning for
support, and now like a child he spoke
aloud, one single word "Why?" Then again, louder this time, "Why?"
And where was everybody? This great silence.
As a strange thought entered his mind his head fell
back on his shoulders and he looked up
into the sky. Was this death? Had he already died? Had his life ceased with the shock of Arthur's words? And was the farm really peopled? Was the farm still alive and it was only he who couldn't see it?
When he tore off his glove and brought his hand down
sharp on to one side of the ornamental spikes that
supported the foot scraper to the side of the door
he knew that he was still alive.
He was walking away from the house now towards the
cottages. He didn't hope to find anyone there,
yet as he rounded the bend and looked up the hill he
stopped in his tracks. There was smoke coming out of the chimney. Again he checked himself from, running, saying,
"Take it easy. Take it easy."
It was some minutes before his knock on the door was
answered, and when it was opened there stood Arnold in his bare feet, his linings showing under an old coat. The
old man's mouth opened wide, but nothing
came forth, until Charlie had stepped into the room
and the door was closed, and then he said, "My God!
sir, am ... am I glad to see you! Oh my
God! sir, I am, I am that at this minute."
It was plain to Charlie that the cowman was suffering from a severe cold and he said to him immediately, "Get...
get back into bed, Arnold." He pointed
to the bed that was drawn up to the side of the fire, but Arnold didn't immediately get back into bed, he
stared up into Charlie's face, and now, the tears
spurting from his eyes, he muttered, "God! sir,
I never thought I'd live to see the day, but. . . but
you're back, you're back. Sit down, sir, sit
down."
"You get back into bed, Arnold, I'll sit
down."
When Arnold had got into bed, Charlie took a
seat by the side of the fire and they sat looking at
each other for a moment before Charlie said, "What's happened, Arnold? I ... I thought the world had
stopped going mad when the war finished, but down
there"-he motioned towards the door-"I can't take it in. Where is she?"
"Gone, sir. And . . . and we never expected
to see you again, sir, at least"-he lowered his
eyes away-"we didn't at first. We did
everything she said, you see, because it was supposed to be authorized by you."
"The clearance of the farm?"
"Aye, sir, aye; she had a written
statement. She had been down to see you in the South and
. . . and when she came back she said you were
in a very bad state and would never work again, I mean, not even to manage. She said, well, sir, she sort
of gave us the idea that besides you being broken up in body your . . . your mind had gone, shellshock,
she said."
Charlie's head drooped on to his chest for a
moment and as a shiver ran through his body he held out his hands towards the blazing fire, and Arnold went
on, "Everybody around was sorry for her, so they
helped: Regan took most of the cattle, they
didn't go to market, the sheep did; but the pigs and
hens and the rest of the livestock, everybody around bought privately."
"The house?"
"Oh, the house. Every stick was carted away
to auction, and we, me and Mary, well, we took
everything, sort of as being your wish, until, well,
until she didn't talk of selling the farm itself, the
land. I asked her
about it and she said that would be seen to later. I know now she'd have to have gone to your solicitor, sir, and he
would have wanted your word for it and deeds and things. I guessed something was wrong before she left. I smelt
a rat, so did Mary, but it was all done so quickly,
like lightnin", so to speak. She had got every
animal off this farm within a week, and the furniture
was out of the house, well, within ten days. When I
asked her where she was going she said . . . she said she was going to take you to Australia as soon as you were
well enough. But somehow I didn't believe her;
neither did Mary. It was the way she went on like as
if she wasn't right in the head."
"Not right in the head?" It was a quiet question, but weighed with disbelief for he could never imagine anyone thinking that his level-headed little sister could do anything that would stamp her as not right in the head.
"Well, sir, one morning as Mary went in she
heard a banging, and there was Miss Betty standing
kicking the green-baized door, kicking it like mad
she was, Mary said, like someone demented. Anyway,
as I said, I smelt a rat and I went across
to Mrs Chapman, her being your mother-in-law like,
although I had heard rumours that you and your missis
weren't . . . well, sir, hitting it off and there was
a separation. But anyway, she was the only one I
could go to for advice, and she said right out it was no use getting in touch with your missis, but what she did do
was write to Miss Nellie, and Miss Nellie
came out like a shot and she tackled Miss Betty,
and there was high jinks in the house. They went
at each other like two cats, Mary said. Miss
Nellie threatened to bring the police, but Miss
Betty said she had your written authority to sell
everything, and she waved a paper at her. Also she said that she was entitled to what she had taken."
Arnold now lifted up a cup from the floor and
sipped at it before he went on, "Miss Nellie
came up here after and when I asked her if you were
capable of tackling the business she said that was the
point, at the moment you mustn't be disturbed. She was
in a state; she sat there crying. Anyway, sir,
Miss Betty left the next morning an' she
put a letter into me hand and said to me that when you came back, that's if you did, I was to give it you.
'Twas then I knew she had done a terrible thing
to you, an' quite innocently you had given her the power to do it, but as I said
to Mary you've still got the buildings and the land, you can start again."
There followed a long silence. The room was
stuffy; he wanted air, he wanted to open his mouth
and draw in great draughts of air; he also wanted
to open his mouth and scream as he had heard men scream so often in agony. . . . Start again! He'd never
be able to start again. For one thing, he hadn't
the money, for if she had cleared the farm she would have cleared the bank at the same time. And even if he
had the money where would he get the strength?
It was a great wonder the shrapnel hadn't moved
already.
He looked at Arnold now and said, "May I
have the letter?"
"Behind the clock, sir." Arnold nodded towards the mantelpiece, and Charlie rose to his feet and
took the letter from behind the clock; then sitting down again he looked at it. Although it was sealed he knew by the
crumpled envelope that it had already been steamed open, but what did that matter. Having taken the double sheet of paper out of the envelope he began to read it. The
letter had no heading, it began simply:
"If the shock hasn't already killed you, you'll be reading this. What I've taken is only my just right,
nobody but you would have expected me to live in that
house under another of the Chapmans because the place,
both the house and the farm, are virtually mine. My
father might have made it but it was I who kept it going, and after working like a black all during the war, to be told by you that I'd be taken care of was just too much.
But it wasn't only that, it was the fact that you had the nerve to tell me that you intended to bring
another Chapman in there. Well, see how she
reacts when she knows she'll have to start and build a
home from scratch ... on nothing!
Most of the furniture in the place was what Mother
bought with her own money and it should have come to me; but what happened when she died? The same as when Father died,
not a penny not a stick was I left. Well, I
feel no compunction in taking what I rightly feel
to be mine. You'll likely be advised to take me
to court. Well, you can do so if you can find me, but
knowing you, you won't take that step, you'll just hide your head in the sand as always.
We never liked each other so I'm not
going to end with any fond farewells, yet in a way
I feel sorry for you for you were born a loser. It
has always amazed me how you ever became commissioned,
it was like a fluke. Well, I suppose everybody
is allowed one break. That's how I see it and
I'm giving it to myself; for nobody else will.
Betty."
The letter was so characteristic of his sister, it was as if she had been sitting opposite him and talking at him.
"She's a wicked woman, sir, a hard wicked
woman. There's never been a happy moment on the
place since you left. What do you think
you'll do, sir?"
Charlie leant back in his chair and looked up
at the low smoked-dyed ceiling before he said flatly
and slowly, "I haven't the slightest idea,
Arnold."
As he finished speaking there was a sound of
footsteps coming along the flags outside the
cottages and Arnold said, "That'll be Mary,
she's been over to the Chapmans. Mrs Chapman
is taking her on, mornin's like, it helps."
However, it wasn't Mary who opened the door
without knocking but Nellie. She almost
burst into the room, then held her breath for a moment as she looked across at Charlie.
Slowly now she closed the door, then came
to his side and, taking his hand, said, "Oh my dear!
you had to find out some time, but I've nearly been out of my mind. Doctor Arlet's secretary phoned
me. I... I seem to have run all the way." She
now turned her face towards Arnold and said,
"You're looking a bit better, Arnold."
"Yes, miss, yes, I'm feeling much